Effective implementation planning enables the teacher to individualize instruction for all students based on their unique needs. The aim of implementation planning is to appropriately structure the learning environment to student ability so that each student is successful in learning.

In this chapter we describe how to access and use the extensive resource materials provided in the Everyone Can online resource at www.HumanKinetics.com/EveryoneCan. This resource collection is designed to be intuitive and easy to use.

This resource is the most comprehensive and extensive set of elementary physical education teaching materials currently available in a single resource. Although primarily designed to be used as a preservice textbook in physical education teacher preparation programs, this book was also written with the needs of in-service teachers in mind.

You can read Human Kinetics e-books on desktop, laptop, and various mobile devices, as long as you have authorized the device or e-reader app to read e-books protected by Adobe’s digital rights management (DRM).

The e-book for Everyone Can! is available at a reduced price. It allows you to highlight, take notes, and easily use all the material in the book in seconds. The e-book is delivered through Adobe Digital Editions® and when purchased through the Human Kinetics site, access to the content is immediately granted when your order is received.

Physical educators are facing increasing demands for accountability while being asked to address the needs of increasingly more diverse classes of students. Unfortunately, many physical education curricula use a one-size-fits-all approach that does not allow teachers to adequately address those needs. This leaves many physical educators frustrated and overworked as they try to make do with a curriculum that really doesn’t work.

Enter Everyone Can!: Skill Development and Assessment in Elementary Physical Education. This book and Web site package offers a wealth of information from the Achievement-Based Curriculum model that addresses the needs of all students. That includes kids who are ready for extension activities, those who are developing typically, those who have not yet mastered the essential skills but have no disability, and those who have disabilities.

Everyone Can! offers

over 2,000 pages of assessment-based instructional activities and 313 games that provide you with a systematic way to foster and monitor student learning;

70 curriculum-embedded assessment items and 140 score sheets;

an in-depth explanation of how to best use the instructional activities, games, and score sheets provided in the online resource; and

hundreds of portable teacher task cards, which allow you to print an activity or game card from the Web and carry it with you to the gym or field.

This resource offers you a wide selection of content to help you meet NASPE, NCPERID, and APENS standards—but it does more than just help you meet national or state standards. It provides you with step-by-step guidance in designing and implementing just the curriculum you need, as well as evaluating student progress and program effectiveness. Anchored in the Achievement-Based Curriculum (ABC) model of PE curricular design, it provides concrete examples to illustrate each step of the ABC model and guides you through a series of decisions to help you choose your program content and how to best teach that content based on student performance. Once you have designed the curriculum, you have a storehouse of resources—including more than 2,000 online pages—to use in implementing your program.

Everyone Can! doesn’t separate out adapted activities; you will find these adaptations throughout the resource. In fact, the hundreds of games and activities in this ready-to-use package come with extensive accommodations, helping you to be inclusive and effective, regardless of a child’s skill level.

This systematic resource provides you with a comprehensive physical education approach right at your fingertips, saving time and energy while offering you concrete guidance in creating or improving your physical education program. In other words, this quintessential elementary physical education package will free you up so everyone can achieve and succeed!

Everyone Can! online student resource
The Everyone Can! online student resource (OSR) enhances the information in the text and provides students with a wealth of classroom materials. The Everyone Can! OSR includes

over 2,000 pages of assessment-based instructional activities and 313 games that provide you with a systematic way to foster and monitor student learning;

70 curriculum-embedded assessment items and 140 score sheets;

hundreds of portable teacher task cards, which allow you to print an activity or game card from the Web and carry it with you to the gym or field.

The online resource materials are organized on two levels. The assessments, assessing activities, accommodations for individuals with disabilities, scoresheets and posters are designed around the objectives with one of each of these resources provided for each of the 70 objectives in the model K-5 program. The remaining instructional resources are organized around the focal points and skill levels within each objective. These include instruction activities for the teacher, station cards, and games.

The online student resource is free with the purchase of the text. To purchase it separately, click on the "Add to Cart" button at the top of this page. Once a student receives access, they may log in to the student resource at www.HumanKinetics.com/EveryoneCan.

Chapter 7. Using the Everyone Can! Online Resource Materials
How to Access the Everyone Can Online Resource
Online Resource Menus
Selecting an Objective from the Main Menu
Exploring the Instruction Materials
Using the Online Resources
Methods for Printing Posters
Other Uses for the Everyone Can Resources
Using Everyone Can for Individualized Education Programs
Summary

Chapter 8. Incorporating the ABC Model Into Your Program
Designing an In-Service Program
Managing Change
Summary
About the Authors

Audiences

Reference for K-6
physical education and adapted physical education preservice and
in-service teachers. Also a reference for PETE instructors, general
elementary special education teachers, district curriculum planners, and
elementary principals.

Luke E. Kelly, PhD,
is a professor of kinesiology at the University of Virginia in
Charlottesville. He has 30 years of experience working with public
schools on evaluating and revising their general physical education
curricula to meet the needs of students with disabilities. He has
written six books and numerous articles on topics related to training
general physical educators. He also has developed and validated a
Web-based motor skill assessment program that allows teachers to assess
students’ motor skills.

Janet Wessel, PhD,
is professor emeritus from MichiganStateUniversity. She has numerous
publications in adapted physical education and has designed
instructional systems and curricula for children with special needs. She
has also presented I Can workshops and has developed and adapted program
content, instructional design, and other activities relevant to cultural
and educational settings. Dr. Wessel has received numerous awards over
the years, including the Crystal Apple Honor Award in recognition of
exceptional educators from the Michigan State University College of
Education.

Gail M. Dummer, PhD, is
a just-retired kinesiology professor from MichiganStateUniversity. For
the past 30 years, she has taught university-level courses, conducted
outreach projects, and conducted research related to adapted physical
activity. She served as the director of the Michigan State University
Sports Skills Program, in which university students provide instruction
and coaching in sports skills to people with disabilities. She has
received numerous awards over the years, including the 2008 Professional
Recognition Award from the Adapted Physical Activity Council of AAHPERD.

Tom Sampson, PhD,
is an assistant professor and chair of the education department at Olivet College in Olivet, Michigan.
He is a former elementary physical education and adapted physical
education teacher, and he has experience in implementing
objective-based, outcome-driven curricula. He has also acted as a K-12
health and physical education curriculum coordinator and has been a
field test teacher for the federally funded I Can adapted PE program.